Nation nears wildfire record with more than 9 million acres burned

A spotter keeps and eye on a wildfire, which is part of the Okanogan Complex, as it burns brush on August 22, 2015 near Omak, Washington. That wildfire was the largest in state history.(Photo: Stephen Brashear, Getty Images)

The amount of land burned by wildfires in the U.S. this year has surpassed 9 million acres, according to data released Thursday by the National Interagency Fire Center.

This is only the fourth time on record the country has reached the 9 million-acre mark, center spokesman Randall Eardley said in an e-mail. The area burned is roughly equivalent to the size of New Jersey and Connecticut combined.

All of the top years for acres burned have occurred since 2000, Eardley said. The worst year occurred in 2006, with 9.8 million acres. In 2007 and 2012, 9.3 million acres were burned, he said. If another 800,000 acres are burned this year, an all-time record would be set.

Accurate wildfire records go back to 1960. Prior to 2000, the U.S. surpassed 7 million acres only one time — in 1963. "The year 2000 seems to have been a turning point in the number of acres we've seen burned," Eardley said.

This year's fire season has been unusually severe in the Northwest. Wildfires there destroyed dozens of homes and forced hundreds of residents to evacuate, sometimes for weeks on end.

The season also included the largest fire in the history of Washington state, the Okanogan Complex fire, which killed three firefighters. Devastating fires in California have killed at least 7 people this month, CalFire, the state firefighting agency, reported.

Interior Secretary Sally Jewell and Agricultural Secretary Tom Vilsack have called the 2015 fire season a disaster for the number of firefighter lives lost as well as destroyed homes and natural resources.

The report about the 9 million-acre mark comes as competing forest management bills make their way through Congress and firefighting costs approach an all-time high.

Republicans are backing a bill in Congress that would reduce environmental review of projects to speed up tree-thinning work meant to improve forest health while reducing wildfire risk. The bill, known as the Resilient Federal Forest Act of 2015, also would limit what they describe as obstructionist litigation over forest projects.

Rep. Rob Bishop, R-Utah, chairman of the House Natural Resource Committee and bill co-sponsor, said Wednesday that policy changes also are needed to reduce the number of lawsuits and lengthy environmental reviews in order to speed the pace of timber thinning projects that he argues would improve forest health and make them more fire-resistant.

A separate bill backed by Democrats, the Wildfire Disaster Funding Act, has been introduced in the House and Senate. It would overhaul federal wildfire policy, increase funding for prevention and ensure large forest fires are treated and funded as natural disasters.

Posted!

A link has been posted to your Facebook feed.

Richard and Kathie Reeves embrace as they stand in the remains of the home of close friends that was destroyed in a wildfire several days earlier in Middletown, Calif. The fire that sped through Middletown and other parts of rural Lake County, less than 100 miles north of San Francisco, has continued to burn since despite a massive firefighting effort.
Elaine Thompson, AP

Adam Bailey, left, looks through the still-smoldering remains of his home as his father-in-law, Joel Miller, looks on in Cobb, Calif. Bailey escaped the flames with his baby Sept. 12, just before fire roared through the neighborhood of about two dozen homes.
Elaine Thompson, AP

Utility worker Michael Quinliven shovels dirt onto a burning stump so he can cut down the charred ponderosa pine next to it in Middletown, Calif. Utility crews worked to remove fire-damaged trees that took down power lines and threatened further damage following a wildfire there two days earlier.
Elaine Thompson, AP

Utility worker Michael Quinliven looks over a charred 130-foot ponderosa pine as a stump burns next to it in Middletown, Calif. Utility crews worked to remove fire-damaged trees that took down power lines and threatened further damage following a wildfire there two days earlier.
Elaine Thompson, AP

A firefighter lights a back burn along Highway 29 north of Middletown, Calif. Two of California's fastest-burning wildfires in decades overtook several Northern California towns, destroying more than 100 homes and sending residents fleeing.
Randy Pench, The Sacramento Bee, via AP

The figure sits on a rock wall outside a hillside home destroyed by fire in Hidden Valley, Calif. Two of California's fastest-burning wildfires in decades overtook several Northern California towns, destroying more than 100 homes and sending residents fleeing.
Eric Risberg, AP

Firefighter Scott Martinez, of the El Segundo Fire Department, gets ready at the base camp in Angels Camp, Calif., for another day battling the Butte Fire. The fire, that started Sept. 9, has burned more than 65,000 acres.
Rich Pedroncelli, AP